Published on 31 January 2023

Development and Psychometric Validation of the Nursing Self-Efficacy Scale for Managing Cancer Treatment-Induced Cardiotoxicity: An Exploratory Mixed-Method Study.

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Magon, Arianna;Conte, Gianluca;Arrigoni, Cristina;Dellafiore, Federica;De Maria, Maddalena;Pittella, Francesco;Rocco, Gennaro;Stievano, Alessandro;Ghizzardi, Greta;Caruso, Rosario

Description

Magon A, Conte G, Arrigoni C, Dellafiore F, de Maria M, Pittella F, Rocco G, Stievano A, Ghizzardi G, Caruso R. Development and Psychometric Validation of the Nursing Self-Efficacy Scale for Managing Cancer Treatment-Induced Cardiotoxicity: An Exploratory Mixed-Method Study. Semin Oncol Nurs. 2022 Nov 18:151367. doi: 10.1016/j.soncn.2022.151367. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 36411124. Abstract Objective: Assessing nursing self-efficacy could be strategic to sustain nursing competence. This study aimed to develop and validate the nursing self-efficacy scale for managing cancer treatment-induced cardiotoxicity (NSS-CTC). Data sources: An exploratory mixed-method study was performed by including two main phases. The first comprised the developmental tasks to generate the initial pool of items, including a literature review and a consensus meeting based on a nominal group technique. The second phase initially involved an external panel of experts in assessing the content validity of the novel scale, followed by a cross-sectional data collection to perform exploratory factor analysis by employing a multicenter and convenience sampling approach. The most plausible psychometric structure derived from the exploratory factor analysis was tested with a confirmatory factor analysis using a second data collection round on another sample enrolled with a multicenter and convenience sampling approach. Internal consistency was assessed using Cronbach's alfa. Conclusion: The NSS-CTS is a novel 15-item self-report measure for assessing nurse self-efficacy in dealing with cancer treatment-related cardiotoxicity. Its two plausible domains were labeled knowledge-related self-efficacy (Cronbach's α = 0.924) and practice-related self-efficacy (Cronbach's α = 0.937); the factor analyses in both samples showed adequate fit to sample statistics. Future studies are necessary to corroborate its construct validity and assess its measurement invariance across various country contexts. Implications for nursing practice: Assessing nursing self-efficacy for managing cancer treatment-induced cardiotoxicity is a promising approach for identifying educational gaps and promoting nursing competency in this particular area of cancer care.

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Metrics

Dataset Index

0.3

FAIR Score

13%

Citations

0

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

Zenodo

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Field

Medicine

Domain

Health Sciences

Confidence Score

97%

Source

Open Alex

Keywords

CancerCardiotoxicityCompetenceEducationNursesNursingFOS: Health sciencesReliabilitySelf-efficacyValidation

Normalization Factors

FT

15.38

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00